A power source for an electric arc welding process, wherein the power source comprises an input stage having an ac input and a first dc output signal; a second stage in the form of an unregulated dc to dc converter having an input connected to the first dc output signal and an output in the form of a second dc output signal electrically isolated from the first dc output signal and with a magnitude of a given ratio to the first dc output signal; and, a third stage to convert the second dc output signal to a welding output for the welding process.
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1. A power source comprising:
an input rectifier for receipt of an ac input signal to output a rectified dc signal;
a power factor correcting converter connected to said input rectifier to convert said rectified dc signal to a first fixed dc voltage signal having a first magnitude to define a first dc bus;
dc to dc inverter connected to said first dc bus to convert said first fixed dc signal to a second fixed dc voltage signal having a second magnitude to define a second dc bus, where said second magnitude is lower than said first magnitude; and
a regulated output converter coupled to said second dc bus to convert said second fixed dc signal to an output signal for a welding process, said output converter being regulated by a feedback signal from said welding process.
2. The power source of
3. The power source of
4. The power source of
5. The power source of
6. The power source of
a network of switches to convert said first fixed dc voltage signal to a first ac signal;
an isolation transformer with a primary winding and a secondary winding for transforming said first ac signal into a second internal ac signal different than said first ac signal; and
a rectifier and capacitor to convert said second internal ac signal into said second fixed dc voltage signal.
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This application is a continuation of prior U.S. application Ser. No. 10/889,866, filed Jul. 13, 2004 of which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The invention relates to the field of electric arc welding and more particularly to a power source for such welding and the method implemented by use of the novel power source.
Electric arc welding involves the passing of an AC or DC current between a metal electrode and a workpiece where the metal electrode is normally a cored metal wire or solid metal wire. A power source is used to create a given current pattern and/or polarity between the advancing electrode wire and workpiece so that the arc will melt the end of the advancing welding wire and deposit the molten metal on the workpiece. Although various converter technologies are used for power sources, the most effective is an inverter based power source where a switching network includes switches operated at high frequency to create the desired waveform or current level for the welding process. An inverter type power source is discussed in Blankenship U.S. Pat. No. 5,278,390 where the inverter is operated in accordance with the preferred embodiment of the present invention. This preferred operating procedure involves “waveform control technology” pioneered by The Lincoln Electric Company of Cleveland, Ohio where the actual waveform is generated by a series of short pulses created at a frequency generally above 18 kHz and the group of short pulses has a profile controlled by a waveform generator. This well known type of inverter control technique is used in the preferred embodiment of the present invention and need not be described in more detail. In accordance with standard power source technology, the input signal to the inverter stage of the power source is rectified current from a sine wave power supply. An appropriate power factor correcting converter is common practice and is either a part of the inverter switching network itself, as shown in Kooken U.S. Pat. No. 5,991,169, or is located before the inverter stage, as shown in Church U.S. Pat. No. 6,177,645. Indeed, a power source with a power factor correcting converter or stage has been known in the welding art for many years. Another power source employing an input power factor correcting converter in the form of a boost converter is shown in Church U.S. Pat. No. 6,504,132. The two patents by Church and the patent by Kooken are incorporated by reference herein as background information and technology to which the present invention relates. In both Kooken U.S. Pat. No. 5,991,169 and Church U.S. Pat. No. 6,504,132 the actual welding current is regulated by an output chopper or buck converter and isolation is obtained by a transformer either in the output of the inverter stage or in the output of the input boost converter. These various topologies for power sources knowledge in arc welding technology. In these prior art patents, the actual welding current, voltage or power is regulated in or before the output stage of the power source, which output stage is either an inverter or a chopper. Neither the inverter, nor the chopper is unregulated to produce a fixed, lower voltage DC bus for driving, a regulated welding stage as anticipated by the present invention.
Isolation of the welding operation is a characteristic of most power supplies for welding. The term “welding” includes “plasma cutting.” In Vogel U.S. Pat. No. 5,991,180, a preregulator using a boost converter is directed to a converter which is disclosed as a chopper having an output isolation transformer located after welding regulation and directly driving the welding operation in this power source, the chopper network is controlled to create the desired regulated output welding current and isolation is provided in the output stage. In a like manner, Thommes U.S. Pat. No. 5,601,741 discloses a boost converter for driving a pulse width modulated controlled inverter providing the regulated output signal to the actual welding operation. In both Vogel and Thommes, the second stage is regulated to direct the power factor controlled current from a preregulator into a welding operation. Welding regulation is in the second stage and is normally driven by a pulse width modulator control circuit. Both Vogel and Thommes are incorporated by reference herein as background technology. In Moriguchi U.S. Pat. No. 6,278,080 an inverter type power source is regulated to control the desired welding current. Isolation is obtained by a transformer between the controlled second stage inverter and the welding output which is disclosed as a DC welding operation. A similar power source is shown in Moriguchi U.S. Pat. No. 5,926,381 and Moriguchi U.S. Pat. No. 6,069,811 wherein the isolation of the control current from the inverter stage is at the output of the inverter and directly drives the welding operation. Moriguchi U.S. Pat. No. 5,926,381 discloses the common arrangement for using the voltage at the output of the first stage boost converter to provide the controller voltage for either the regulated inverter stage or the boost converter itself. The three Moriguchi patents are incorporated by reference herein as background information showing the prior art power source where a regulated inverter is driven by an input boost converter or a DC output of a rectifier to produce a controlled welding current directed to an output transformer used for isolation. The secondary AC signal of the isolation transformer is directly used for the welding operation. There is no third stage topology as used in the novel power source of the invention.
Turning now to non-welding technology, an aspect of the invention is the use of a synchronous rectifier device at the output of a DC/DC second stage converter. Synchronous rectifiers are common practice and one such rectifier is illustrated in Boylan U.S. Pat. No. 6,618,274. Calkin U.S. Pat. No. 3,737,755, discloses a DC/DC converter for low power use where a fixed regulated current is directed to a non-regulated inverter to provide a non variable output DC signal. Any control of the non-regulated inverter is at the input side of the inverter so that the input DC signal is the only parameter that can be regulated to control the fixed output DC signal of the inverter. This is topography that requires a control of the signal to the inverter so that the inverter provides a controlled fixed output signal. This is a different concept than anticipated by use of the present invention; however, the non-welding general background technology in Boylan and Calkin is incorporated by reference herein to show a synchronous rectifier and a version of a non-regulated inverter where any regulation is performed before the inverter by controlling the level of the input DC signal. Neither of these patents relate to a power source for welding and are only incorporated by reference as general technical concepts, such as synchronous rectifier devices and unregulated inverters. A non-welding two stage AC to DC converter is shown in Smolenski U.S. Pat. No. 5,019,952 for imparting minimum harmonic distortion to the current flowing into the converter. The load is not variable and does not require regulation as demanded in a welding operation. This patent is incorporated by reference to show general technology not related in any way the demands of a power source for electric arc welding.
These patents constitute the background of the invention relating to a power source that must be regulated by a welding operation where such regulation is by a feedback loop of average current, average voltage, and power of the actual welding operation. Fixed load power sources are not relevant to the invention, except as general technical information.
In the past, an inverter in a power source outputted a welding current regulated by a parameter in the welding operation, such as current, voltage or power. This inverter was normally controlled by a pulse width modulator wherein the duty cycle of the switches operated at high frequency was controlled by the feedback from the welding operation so that the duty cycle was adjusted in a range substantially less than 100%. This type of PWM controlled inverter is referred to as a regulated single stage inverter. Such inverter formed the output of the power source and was the last stage of the power source. Lower duty cycles resulted in higher primary currents and more losses. The efficiency of the inverter varied according to the duty cycle adjustment caused by the requirement of regulating the output of the single stage inverter to create an output signal suitable for welding. Using a power source where the final stage is a regulated single stage inverter resulted in heat losses, lower efficiency, high cost and increased component size. For these reasons, some welding source manufacturers have marketed power sources as being better than an inverter power source because they do not use inverters with the resulting high cost and other difficulties. An inverter stage which had the dual function of isolating the output and regulating the current for the purposes of creating a current suitable for welding was to be avoided. See Hoverson U.S. Pat. No. 6,723,957, incorporated by reference herein as background.
The present invention relates to a power source for electric arc welding (plasma cutting) wherein the inverter of the power source is a second stage as in the past, but is unregulated so that a third stage can be added to provide the actual regulation for creating a current suitable for welding. By using this three stage concept, the inverter can operate at a very high frequency of switching whereas the output third stage can be a chopper operated at a lower frequency of switching. Consequently, the switching frequency is optimized by the function performed by the stage as opposed to the need for using high frequency in a pulse width modulated inverter stage used for actual regulation of the output welding current. Furthermore, the isolated, fixed DC voltage to the regulated third stage can be substantially lower than the DC voltage from the input converter stage and much higher than the actual welding output voltage.
The invention involves a novel topography for a power source wherein the pulse width modulated inverter is merely a second stage for creating an isolated fixed output DC bus without a feedback signal to the second stage pulse width modulated inverter. This isolated bus is used in a third stage regulated by the actual welding parameters to create a current suitable for welding. Consequently, the invention involves an unregulated second stage not only providing necessary isolation but also to producing a fixed DC output bus to be used by a third stage wherein welding regulation is accomplished. The unregulated second stage inverter is operated at a very high frequency with a duty cycle that is fixed during operation of the power source. The frequency is over 18 kHz and preferably about 100 kHz. The duty cycle is fixed at various levels; however, the preferred duty cycle is close to 100% to give the maximum efficiency level obtained by use of the present invention. The use of a fixed, high duty cycle minimizes the current circulation time of the phase shift modulator controlled inverter second stage to substantially reduce heat an increase efficiency. In accordance with an aspect of the invention, the output of the second unregulated inverter stage is a rectifier using well known synchronous rectifier devices, which devices are controlled by the secondary winding of the internal isolation transformer of the second stage unregulated inverter. By using synchronous rectifier devices at the output of the second stage, there is further improvement in the total efficiency of the power source. By using the present invention, the first stage is either an input rectifier or an input rectifier with a power factor correcting converter. A first stage power factor correcting converter is preferred. This converter is after a standard rectifier or can be combined with the rectifier. Of course, this converter can be a passive power factor correcting converter or an active converter such as a boost, buck or buck+boost converter. The first stage of the invention produces a first DC bus with a fixed voltage. By using a standard first stage for the power source, the first DC output signal which is the input DC bus to the unregulated inverter can be regulated and fixed at a value of about 400-900 volts DC. The output of the unregulated, isolation inverter forming the second stage of the novel power source is a fixed DC bus having a fixed relationship with the input DC has from the first stage. The voltage of the second DC bus or output is substantially less than the voltage of the DC bus from the first stage. The power source thus produces a second DC bus which has a fixed mathematical relationship with the input DC bus from the power factor correcting converter in accordance with standard practice, the second stage unregulated inverter includes an isolation transformer having a primary winding and a secondary winding so that the secondary winding is isolated from the input of the power source. The unregulated, second stage inverter can be operated at a switching frequency to optimize the operation of the second stage inverter. Thus, extremely high switching frequency is used to reduce the size and cost of the components in the novel, unregulated second stage inverter. By utilizing a fixed duty cycle with phase shift control, voltage and current surges in the switching devices are reduced to provide a soft switching operation. Indeed, in the preferred embodiment, the duty cycle is fixed at 100% so that the switches are full on or full off. This drastically reduces the circulated current in the second stage and greatly improves the operating characteristics of the second stage inverter which also provides the function of isolating the welding output of the power source from the AC input of the power source. By having the switching devices in the second stage unregulated inverter operated at full on, this inverter has a high efficiency and is very flexible in operation. An isolation transformer determines the relationship between the fixed DC bus at the input side of the unregulated second stage (a “first DC output signal” from the first stage) and the DC output bus at the output of this second stage (a “second DC output signal”). In some prior art power sources, the duty cycle at the primary winding of the isolation transformer in the regulated inverter is regulated by the welding operation. There is no regulation by the welding operation in either the first stage or second stage of the novel power source used in the present invention.
The present invention involves a three stage power source where the second stage is unregulated isolation stage and the third stage is a regulated device, such as an inverter or chopper. A chopper with a switching frequency less than the second stage inverter is preferred and is used in the practical implementation of the present invention. The chopper better controls the output welding characteristics of the power source. An inverter with an unregulated isolation stage followed by a chopper stage provides a more efficient power source than a single stage (regulated) inverter, as used in prior art inverter based power sources. A power source where the second stage is an inverter has a maximum output that is at east mice the rated operating voltage of the inverter. When there are only two stages, a single stage regulated inverter forms the second and last stage and runs at 50% or less energy transfer time. Therefore, the inverter of a prior art two stage power source requires at least twice the primary current than the novel three stage power source of the invention. The unregulated isolated stage of the present invention has a higher efficiency even though it uses the same transformer turn ratio. This is especially important when the second stage is running at full on or 100% duty cycle. Consequently, the present invention drastically increases the energy transfer time and reduces primary current of the isolation transformer in the second stage of an inverter based power source used for electric arc welding.
Normal control of an inverter in a power source used for welding is a phase-shift PWM control where the conduction states of the leading and lagging switches of the primary side have overlap that determines the energy transfer time of the inverter. The primary current has to circulate during the non-transfer time in order to achieve soft switching. Therefore, the primary side of the unregulated inverter used in the invention is more efficient than that of the single stage regulated inverter used in the prior art, due to a small amount of off time and less primal current in the unregulated inverter. This is an advantage of using the present invention. Furthermore, the switching frequency of the inverter isolation stage, or second stage, is preferably much higher than the switching frequency of the output chopper third stage when using the present invention. The switching loss in the IGBT, and the diodes of the chopper used in the present invention is less than the loss in the output rectifier diodes of the single stage inverter used as the second, regulating stage of a standard inverter based power source. The unregulated second stage, as used in the present invention, is preferably a full bridge inverter; however, various other inverter designs can be employed, especially dependent upon the voltage at the primary side DC bus. The preference is to use 600 volt IGBT switches for either 450 volt bus or two 450 volt buses in series. Since the second stage inverter has no control feedback and is driven at full on regardless of the output load demand, the secondary bus voltage is always equal to the primary bus voltage divided by the transformer turn ratio. This is another advantage of using the three stage inverter based power source for electric arc welding wherein the second stage is an unregulated inverter and the third stage is the regulated device, preferably a chopper but alternatively is an inverter.
The energy loss in the secondary of the unregulated inverter is about twice as much as the energy loss on the primary side when standard diodes are used for the output rectifier of the second stage. The reason for this higher loss is that the secondary current is substantially greater than the primary current when the isolation transformer has a turn ratio with the primary turns substantially greater than the secondary turns. Thus, loss in the output rectifier is much higher than the conduction loss in the primary switches of the second stage inverter. To reduce this situation, an aspect of the invention is the use of very low on-resistance FETs configured as synchronous rectifier devices. The use of synchronous rectifier devices in the output of the second stage reduces the conduction loss in the secondary side of the inverter. Diodes in the secondary side are hard switched even though the switches in the primary side are soft switched. Soft switching is by phase-shift control of the witches in the primary side of the second stage inverter. The reverse recovery current experiences more loss in the secondary diodes than the on-resistance loss when the second stage inverter is switched at a frequency above 100 kHz. Therefore, it is also desirable to use synchronized rectifier devices to reduce switching losses by having a time delay between the primary switching control and the secondary synchronous rectifier control. The ability to use this concept is an advantage of using synchronous rectifier devices in the output rectifier on the secondary side of the inverter forming the second stage of the three stage power source of the present invention. In addition, the use of synchronous rectifier devices in the secondary side of the inverter reduces the energy loss experienced in the total transfer of power from the input DC bus to the output DC bus of the second stage. It has been established that the control of the synchronous rectifier is simplified if the second stage unregulated inverter is used to run full on at all times. This is the normal operating condition of the unregulated inverter used as the second stage in the novel power source of the present invention. The secondary voltage in the unregulated inverter is used to generate the gate driving signals for the synchronous rectifier devices by connecting the devices to opposite ends of the secondary winding of the isolation transformer used in the second stage unregulated inverter of the invention. Comparing synchronous rectifier devices to standard diodes, the synchronous rectifier devices may with low-resistance FETs reduces the energy lost in the secondary side of the unregulated inverter. This reduction is as great as 50%.
A power source for electric arc welding having an active power factor correcting feature and tight output control of the energy directed to the welding operation requires at least two switching stages. These two stages assure that instantaneous energy transferred into the power source and transferred out the power source can be regulated independently with appropriate energy storage components. Thus, a power factor correcting power source for electric arc welding generally requires two independent switching control circuits. One of the control circuits is used to control the energy or the output current for the welding operation. The other control circuit is used to control the DC signal from the active power factor correcting converter forming the first stage of the power source. Thus, electric arc welding power sources having power factor correcting capabilities requires two switching networks each of which has independent control requirements. The first switching control is for the output welding current and the other switching control is for power factor correcting at the input stage of the power source. This second switching control assures that the output of the first stage is a fixed DC voltage referred to as a “DC bus.” The voltage of the DC bus itself is used to control the first stage converter to assure that the DC bus from this converter has a fixed voltage level. To recapitulate an inverter based power source for electric arc welding requires two separate switching networks and two control circuits for these networks.
An inverter based power source for electric arc welding has another conceptual requirement. One of the stages in the power source must provide electrical isolation between the variable input AC signal and the regulated output current suitable for welding. The isolation device is normally in the form of a transformer. In prior art, two stage inverter based power sources there are two locations for the isolation device. In the first example, the power factor correcting input stage is not isolated and an isolation transformer is provided in the second stage regulated output inverter. In another example, isolation is in the first stage power correcting converter. In this second example, a non-isolation output inverter or other non-isolation converter can be used as the second stage. The first example is more efficient than the second example due to 60 Hz effect on the RMS current at the input side at the power source. In recapitulation, the second conceptual requirement of a welding power source is isolation.
The two requirements of an active power factor correcting power source for welding are (a) two separate and independent control circuits for two separate switching networks and (b) an appropriate structure for isolating the input of the power source from the output of the power source. These basic requirements of inverter based power sources are implemented in the present invention. When an unregulated inverter is used, the unregulated second stage is an isolation stage between two regulated non-isolation stages to form a unique arrangement involving a three stage inverter based power source. The three stage inverter of the present invention is more efficient than the two stage inverter based power source assuming the same power factor correcting preregulator is used in both inverters. Thus, the present invention is more efficient, but still has the essential characteristics required for a power source used in electric arc welding. There are two independently controlled switching networks. There is an isolation stage. These constraints are accomplished in a manner to increase efficiency and obtain better welding performance and better heat distribution of the power switching components.
Since the second unregulated inverter stage of the present invention provides system isolation, many types of non-isolated converters can be used as the power factor correcting preregulator. A boost converter is the most popular converter due to the current shaping function and the continuous line current characteristics of this type of conversion. However, the output voltage of the boost converter is higher than the peak of the highest line voltage, which peak can be as high as 775 volts. Thus, other active power factor correcting regulators can be used with the invention, which is a three stage power source wherein the second stage is unregulated and provides isolation. One of the other options for the active power factor correcting input or first stage is a step-up/step-down converter so that the primary voltage bus or input bus to the second stage can be lower than the peak of the input AC voltage signal to the power source. This type of power factor correcting converter still produces low harmonics. One such power factor converter is referred to as a buck+boost converter. A 400 volt to 500 volt DC bus used for the second stage is obtained with an input AC voltage in the range of 115 volts to 575 volts. Irrespective of the AC voltage to the first stage, the output voltage of the active power factor converter is controlled to be at a level between 400 volts and 500 volts. Other types of active and passive power factor correcting inverters can be used in the invention. The preferred converter is active thus constituting a second switching network requiring a second control circuit. When using the term electric arc welding, it also includes other output processes, such as plasma cutting.
As so far explained, the invention involves a three stage power source for electric arc welding. A feedback control in the third stage creates an output current suitable for welding. The input first stage is normally an active power factor correcting converter requiring a second switching network and a second independent control circuit. This three stage topography is not used in the prior art. By having this topography, the added second stage is merely used to convert the high voltage DC bus at the primary side of the second stage to a lower voltage DC bus at the secondary side of the second stage isolated from the primary side. Thus, the invention involves a DC bus at the secondary side of the second stage so that the bus can be used for regulation of welding power. The term “bus” means a DC signal that has a controlled fixed level. In the present invention, there is a first DC bus from the input stage called the “first DC output” which first DC output has a controlled DC voltage. There is a second DC bus at the secondary side of the second stage called the “second DC output” which second DC output is also a controlled DC voltage level. The creation of a second DC bus at the secondary side of an unregulated inverter has advantages, other than the advantages associated with the use of the unregulated second stage inverter so far described. The secondary DC bus or second DC output is isolated from the primary side of the second stage so that there is no isolation required in the third stage welding control circuit. In other words, the output control circuit, such as a chopper, has an input DC bus with a fixed voltage level. In practice, the chopper has a controller with a control voltage that is derived from the input DC to the chopper. This input DC signal is isolated from the input power. Consequently, the control voltage for the controller of the output stage or chopper can be derived from a non-isolated DC source. This is normally the input signal to the chopper. Separate isolation of the control voltage for the controller used in the output stage is not required. The use of a fixed DC bus from the second stage allows the DC voltage to the output third stage, which is regulated by the welding operation, to be much lower than the normal input primary DC bus (“first DC output”) of the power source. In the past, the output of the power factor converter is a relatively high level DC signal based upon the use of a boost converter. This high DC voltage was directed to the regulated inverter stage for use in outputting a current suitable for the welding. By using the present invention the high voltage from the output bus of the power factor converter is drastically reduced. It is more efficient to convert a 100 volt DC bus into a 15 volt control power than to convert a 400 volt DC bus to a 15 volt control power. This creation of a second, lower voltage DC bus is a substantial advantage of the three stage power source of the present invention.
In accordance with the present invention there is provided a power source for an electric arc welding process wherein the power source comprises an input stage having an AC input first DC output signal. A second stage in the form of an unregulated DC to DC converter has an input connected to the first DC output signal and an output in the form of a second DC output signal electrically isolated from the first DC output signal with a magnitude of a given ratio to the first DC output signal. The power source includes a third stage to convert the second DC output signal to a welding current for the welding process. In accordance with another aspect of the present invention there is provided a power factor correcting converter as the first stage of the novel three stage power source. The third stage of the power source includes a regulated converter such as a chopper or inverter. When using an inverter, the output is a DC signal directed to a polarity network or switch, which switch allows DC welding by the power source. The polarity switch allows welding either DC negative, DC positive or AC. The welding process, using either a chopper or an inverter, can be performed with shielding gas, such as MIG welding, and can use any type of electrode, such as tungsten, cored wire or solid metal wire. In accordance with an aspect of the invention, the output of the unregulated DC to DC converter is substantially less than the input to the second stage. In most instances, the input and output of the second stage are DC voltages with generally fixed magnitudes.
The present invention relates to a three stage power source for electric arc welding wherein the first stage is normally regulated to produce a fixed first DC signal or “first DC output.” This first fixed DC signal, DC bus or DC output is connected to the primary side of a second stage unregulated inverter, wherein the secondary side of the inverter is a fixed DC output signal directed to an output third stage. The third stage has a regulated switching network for creating a current suitable for welding. The regulated third stage is controlled by a feedback loop from the welding operation to control the welding operation by current, voltage or power.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the switching frequency of the unregulated inverter constituting the second stage of the power source is substantially greater than 18 kHz. Indeed, the switching frequency of the second stage is substantially greater than the switching frequency of the regulated third stage of the power source and is normally about 100 kHz. In this manner, smaller components are used in the second stage of the three stage power source.
The primary object of the present invention is the provision of a three stage power source for electric arc welding, which power source is efficient in operation, has better welding performance and is more robust.
Still a further object of the present invention is the provision of an electric arc power source as defined above, which electric arc power source has a second stage where a DC bus is converted to a DC bus through an isolation transformer without regulation of the conversion.
Another object of the present invention is the provision of a method for converting an AC signal into a DC current suitable for welding which method involves rectifying and converting said AC input into a DC signal called a first DC output. The DC signal is converted to an isolated DC bus and then used to power a regulated stage controlled by the parameters of a welding operation to produce a current suitable for welding.
Another object of the present invention is the provision of a power source and method, as defined above, which power source and method uses a high switching frequency above 18 kHz and about 100 khZ with a fixed duty cycle to prevent losses.
Yet another object of the present invention is the provision of a power source for electric arc welding and method, as defined above, which power source and method have reduced magnetic losses, reduced component sizes, and provides an efficient power source for electric arc welding.
Still a further object of the present invention is the provision of a power source for electric arc welding and method of using same, which power source and method involves an unregulated DC to DC converter providing isolation so the output stage regulated for welding need not include an isolation feature.
Another object of the present invention is the provision of a power source for electric arc welding and a method of using the same, which power source and method includes a DC to DC unregulated inverter where the output of the inverter is much lower in voltage than the input to the inverter. Thus, the efficiency is increased due to outputting a lower voltage that needs to be converted to a welding voltage.
These and other objects and advantages will become apparent from the following description taken together with the accompanying drawings.
The present invention relates to a three stage power source for use in electric arc welding. Of course, the concept of welding also encompasses the related technology of plasma cutting. The invention has an input stage for converting an AC signal into a first DC output bus. This output bus has a fixed voltage level in accordance with the preferred embodiment of the invention and is directed to the input of a novel second stage used in the welding technology and best shown in
The general topography of the present invention is illustrated in
Power source PS3 in
As previously described, input stage I converts either a single phase or a three phase AC signal 12 into a fixed DC bus 14 (DC#1) for use by the unregulated inverter A constituting second stage II. The implementation of the present invention generally employs a DC to DC converter in stage I to produce the DC voltage indicated as line 14 in
By providing low fixed voltage on output bus 20 illustrated as lines 20a, 20b, the third stage of the novel three stage power source for welding can be a chopper or other converter operated at a frequency greater than 18 kHz. The switching frequencies of the unregulated inverter and the regulated output converter may be different. Indeed, normally the switching frequency of the chopper is substantially less than the frequency of unregulated inverter A. Power source PS4 shown in
In implementing either a two stage power source as used in the prior art or the novel three stage power source of the present invention, it is necessary to provide a voltage for operating the controllers for both the regulated and unregulated switching networks used in these two types of power sources.
Another implementation of the present invention with more specific details on the preferred embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in
Input stage I normally includes a rectifier and a power factor correcting DC to DC converter as disclosed in
Unregulated inverter A of stage II can use various inverter circuits. The preferred circuit is illustrated in
Various circuits can be used for the unregulated inverter A constituting novel stage II of the invention. The particular type of inverter is not a limiting feature of the invention. Several inverters have been used in the invention. Some are illustrated in
The invention involves a power source for electric arc welding wherein the control of the welding current is not performed in the second stage. In this stage, a DC bus having a high voltage is converted to a fixed DC bus (DC#2) having a low voltage for the purposes of driving a third stage, which third stage is a regulated stage to provide a current suitable for electric arc welding. Electric arc welding incorporates and is intended to include other welding related applications such as the concept of plasma cutting. The various circuits used in the three stages can be combined to construct various architectures for the basic topography which is a three stage power source.
Daniel, Joseph A., Luo, Lifeng, Kooken, Todd E.
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